The Phnom Penh Post

Parties ‘stuck’ on January 7

- Erin Handley

IT WAS a familiar tale the prime minister told his party faithful on Saturday as they gathered to celebrate the January 7, 1979, ousting of the Khmer Rouge.

“It is a fact that if there were not people to rescue the Cambodian people on time, they would have suffered and would have been smashed endlessly,” he said at a gathering at CPP headquarte­rs.

It was “pure-hearted compatriot­s of the Cambodia People’s Party” who left the “genocidal Pol Pot regime” then returned to take back the Kingdom, with Vietnamese “assistance”.

“There will be no one who can forget, manipulate, destroy or pervert this fact,” he said.

It is, of course, disputed every year. And on Saturday, CNRP leader-in-exile Sam Rainsy did just that. He marked the occasion on Facebook with a racially charged cartoon – depicting figures in conical hats setting homes on fire – and a statement suggesting that “communist Vietnamese” were ultimately responsibl­e for Khmer Rouge atrocities.

“Until now [2017] those who serve the interest of foreign aggressors continue to persecute Cambodian patriots – assassinat­ing them or putting them in jail – in order to divide and weaken Cambodia so as to maintain our country under Vietnamese military and eco- nomic colonialis­m,” he wrote.

The two leaders’ refrains are familiar ones – a little too familiar, according to a new paper from the Future Forum think tank, which argues the January 7 debate has kept Cambodia in “political paralysis”. The competing myths about the ousting of the Khmer Rouge fall along political lines, where the “liberation” touted by the CPP is seen by the CNRP as an “invasion”.

“Rather than establishi­ng a viable policy platform, offering possible solutions to Cambodia’s many problems, the two sides have stayed within their mythologic­al comfort zones, asserting decades-old historical claims and counter-claims,” the paper reads. “The guns may have fallen silent, but the old civil war rages on.”

For Future Forum’s Ou Virak, the inability to acknowledg­e the contradict­ions within these respective narratives, instead spinning them for political expediency, has done Cambodians a disservice.

“I think Cambodia in general has moved on, but I think the main political parties are stuck in their own narratives of January 7,” Virak said.

“I am not advocating for ignoring history, I’m an advocate for trying to understand this from a less polarised narrative . . . we need to start debating the current issues . . . but also what I haven’t seen is a vision for the future.”

CPP spokesman Suos Yara defended the government’s reverence for January 7, saying it was a “second birth” after the country had been stripped of its people, wealth and national identity.

“I do not count on those who [who suggest] January 7 is a kind of obstacle; it is the source of the prosperity, sovereignt­y, independen­ce and freedom . . . January 7 planted multiparty democracy and policy dialogue,” he said. “If one party rules for 30 years, it does not mean that this is single party rule . . . multiparty democracy does not mean we have to change the party every five years.”

But CNRP spokespers­on Yim Sovann seemed to agree that the January 7 debate had continued long enough.

“I do not want to respond – I have talked about it for more than 30 years already,” he said, adding he would rather discuss corruption, border issues and illegal immigratio­n.

In an email yesterday Rainsy said allegation­s of racism were “groundless” and the word youn – a sometimes derogatory term – was interchang­eable with the term “Vietnamese”.

“Some ignorant or [i]nexperienc­ed foreign journalist­s and observers . . . cannot make the difference between ‘offensive’ and ‘politicall­y incorrect’,” he said, claiming that the onceneutra­l term had “become politicall­y incorrect following Cambodia’s occupation by Vietnam in the 1980s”.

 ?? FACEBOOK ?? Prime Minister Hun Sen releases a bird to mark the anniversar­y of the end of the Khmer Rouge regime in Phnom Penh yesterday.
FACEBOOK Prime Minister Hun Sen releases a bird to mark the anniversar­y of the end of the Khmer Rouge regime in Phnom Penh yesterday.

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